newfarer wrote:plastic ban is good, but I see us saying serikal saidia when it's time comes in the next less than 40 days.by now we should be testing the alternatives .
Alternatives will be found. I think it is the role of government to kaa ngumu with the law and the role of business people to find alternatives within that law. I think this is the one law that government should absolutely not go back on.
See what happens when governments think only of business:
You can see more images of the Citarum River in Indonesia here:
http://www.austroindones...citarum-river-indonesia
When most people think of pollution they think of kukunia or kukojoa kwa mtoni or small things like that. Even if all the people in the world urinated and flashed their toilets directly in the river the waters would still be usable and very healthy and this is because human or animal waste is biodegradable. By the time human or animal waste has been in the river 24 to 48 hours it has been changed by bacteria and other organisms into something useful for something else. The major killer of the environment is plastics and other petrochemicals. The sooner we ban these stuff the better.
People talk of the industrialization of countries like India but just Google "pollution Ganges River" to see how millions of people have to live so that the country can produce a few billionare industrialists.